You may or may not know that we WELCOME private parties at the Gallery. Friday
night, we had a fantastic group that came in to paint the palette knife Roosta'
led by our palette knife queen, Al Fowler.
If you haven't tried the palette knife technique yet, it's a MUST. This is what a palette knife looks like.
You use the palette knife instead of a brush to paint your masterpiece. The most common praise we hear when using the knife is, "This is so freeing!"
Painting with a knife is similar to frosting a cake or smoothing out concrete with a trowel. A palette knife provides a different result than painting with a brush. You can easily add texture to a painting and leave thick coats of paint just as well as small details that are hard to accomplish with a brush.
For those of you that might be interested in some more technical terms, a palette knife allows you to produce "impasto" work. Impasto is a method of applying paint where the marks made by the palette knife are visible. In other words, it makes your painting look like Vincent van Gogh's!
The music was upbeat with Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue filling the air as this group of friends and family shared hugs, laughs, and stories from their week.
If you haven't tried the palette knife technique yet, it's a MUST. This is what a palette knife looks like.
You use the palette knife instead of a brush to paint your masterpiece. The most common praise we hear when using the knife is, "This is so freeing!"
Painting with a knife is similar to frosting a cake or smoothing out concrete with a trowel. A palette knife provides a different result than painting with a brush. You can easily add texture to a painting and leave thick coats of paint just as well as small details that are hard to accomplish with a brush.
For those of you that might be interested in some more technical terms, a palette knife allows you to produce "impasto" work. Impasto is a method of applying paint where the marks made by the palette knife are visible. In other words, it makes your painting look like Vincent van Gogh's!
Back to Friday night...There were some
newbies (people that have never painted) in the room, but no one seemed intimidated in the slightest. After the
food was spread and the wine was uncorked, each artist found an easel for
an evening of scraping, cutting, and spreading paint into their own rendition
of the Roosta'. By the way, scraping, cutting and spreading are all very technical palette knife terms.
After
painting the background of a fence and the ground for the Roosta' to scratch
on, we took a break to let that layer of paint dry before chalking on our yard
birds.
The music was upbeat with Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue filling the air as this group of friends and family shared hugs, laughs, and stories from their week.
All progressed through
the painting with ease, and by the end, some had made plans for dinner after, for Halloween, and, my favorite, for a return trip as a group to paint again!
For more pictures, please visit facebook.com/grapesandgallery
Thanks Garnet Noblet and Tom Watson for coordinating the event!
Paint YOUR dayThanks Garnet Noblet and Tom Watson for coordinating the event!
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